Luxor
Casino Boy says:
Hey! Why'd I get all dressed up if this joint didn't?
Hotel Size:
4427 rooms
Room Price:
Casino Size:
120,000 s.f.
Value:
Good
Cheap gaming:
Pool:
Buffet:

 

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Luxor
1-800-288-1000
3900 Las Vgas Blvd. South, Las Vegas
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It's a once-Egyptian-themed Strip resort, but Las Vegas is embarrassed about themes these days. So, now it's about Criss Angel, with his debris scattered across the casino. To think, they thought Egyptians were lame! Room prices are reasonable. The location is far south but near a few other major casinos.


Room Quality: The rooms in the pyramid are cool because of the slanted windows, and you get to ride the inclinator up to them. Plus, you get to bump your head on the window every time you try to look out. They are okay, average sized (actually a little larger, but you lose some space because of the slanted wall), but the bathrooms are small and offer only a shower with no tub. The rooms in the non-pyramid towers are less exotic in shape, but they are larger, nicer and have tubs and separate showers. The twin queens aren't as fancy, but they still have separate soaking tubs and showers. The towers are also a slightly longer walk to the casino. Rooms have hairdryers and irons. Pyramid mini-suites cost more, but you can relax in your own bubbling Jacuzzi tub. Now, that's romantic!
Service Quality: Fair. This is one of the biggest hotels in the world, so they've seen every request you can imagine. Except some of ours involving Sit'n'Spin, vacuums and a goat. If it's a busy weekend, the wait can be long for extra towels or more soap. Like most large places, check-in can be a long and boring wait. Room service is good.
What You Get Bottles of in the Bathroom: Shampoo, conditioner and lotion, possibly more. It's standard for a big, fancy hotel. You also get nice, fluffy towels but you're not supposed to keep those (wink, wink). The mini-suites do it up right with fancier shampoos, bath salts, gels, ex-foliants and nicer lotion.
Clientele: Young to middle-aged. This place doesn't draw the big high-rollers, but you will see plenty of people betting big sums of money.
How's the Pool? It's pretty good, with a decent pyramid theme with palm trees, but the MGM Grand and Tropicana across the road have better ones. Mandalay Bay next door is the best around. In the winter the Luxor pool may be closed, in which case they will send you next door to the Excalibur (not to Mandalay Bay).


Table Games: Lots of games, including the regulars and the dreaded 6:5 blackjack. The casino is sort of confusing to get around, but it's a pleasant place to play if you've got the money.
Bet Minimums: $10 to $15 most of the time for tables, but if it's a hopping time, like a Saturday night, you can expect to see that go up more. Craps is likely $10 with 3x4x5x odds. Roulette is $1 chips with a $10 min. If you like single-zero roulette, you can get into it for $25 minimum.
Machines: Nickels to $100, with just about every variety of game you can imagine. They have lots of those crazy, multi-line nickel machines that are so popular. For the most part, we have heard the slots are tight, and there is very little full-pay video poker.
Cocktails? Good. You can get drunk enough to demand to see Nefertiti's titis if you tip the cocktail waitresses well. Nickel players tend to be ignored, so if you play the nickels, be vocal.
Who Gets Comps? The unified club serves for all MGM Mirage Properties and ain't so hot. People betting $50 at the tables for four hours a day will get casino rate, and the $150 bettors may get their room taken care of.


Backstage Deli: If it looks like a deli, quacks like a deli, and has corned beef that gives you the runs like a deli, it must be a deli. And this one sure is.
Burger Bar: It's a fancy burger place where you build your own burger to specs, which includes Black Angus or Kobe beef and top it with salmon or lobster. Don't worry, you can make a regular old burger, too, but if you want something really goofy, they'll help you out. This is in the walkway between Luxor and the Mandalay Bay.
Giorgio Caffe: This place lies in the mysterious nether world between Mandalay Bay and the Luxor, between South Asia and Egypt. Except it serves Italian. We guess that Marc Antony and Pol Pot must have franchised it while visiting Marc Antony. They serve lunch and dinner, have a fine wine list, but otherwise are just a decent Italian place.
Hussong's Cantina: The mediocre Mexican restaurant with the infamously loud bar replicates itself here, bringing along the unspectacular food and hoping to recreate the party vibe. The Tequila is better than the tacos.
More - the Buffet at Luxor: The name says it all. This is an unimaginative buffet set to serve people who want a buffet but don't know where the really good ones are (hint: Planet Hollywood, Wynn, Bellagio, Paris). It's passable, and that's about it.
Pyramid Cafe: Stop in for your morning fix of food and coffee, but don't go way out of your way for this slightly-better-than-average coffee shop experience.
Tacos and Tequila: Boy, is this place ugly. They call it highly stylized, but it's just weird: sort of minimalist but also sort of obnoxious. The guy who designed the room gets equal billing with the chef, so you can figure out you're paying for way more than the food. The food is Mexican, and there is also a pricey bar.
Tender Steak and Seafood: Dig into a decent steak in a decent room with a quite lame name. Although, it's better than "Supertough" steak. You won't find a hoof in your cut of meat, and the room is small pretty understated and classy (especially considering how gaudy the rest of the hotel is becoming). Still, there are better and more elegant steakhouses for the same money.
There is also a food court at the Luxor serving all the usual fare: McDonald's, Quizno's, Nathans, Little Caesars Pizza, Ice Cream and, of course, a Starbucks.


Carrot Top: Ugh. We're fans of neither prop comedy or the bigger-and-louder-is-funnier brand of comedy, so Carrot Top holds no appeal for us. If you like this sort of thing, though, here is the next generation's Gallagher with the added benefit that you won't get smashed watermelon on your clothes.
Cathouse: Don't worry, you're not going to be dancing on furballs and cat scratch towers. The cat house here refers to the club's resemblance to a brothel. The look is complete with huge padded red doors, loads of red velvet, overstuffed booths and video screens of vixens dancing in the faux upper windows.
Criss Angel - Believe: Criss Angel's magic show is produced by the folks at Cirque and... it is an unmitigated suckfest. A lame plot, a dull star and, worst of all, pretty boring magic. The story is some claptrap about Angel being injured during a stunt and hallucinating/dreaming a show. Who knew that inside his head was lamer than outside? Go elsewhere for magic or Cirque.
Fantasy: Do you like the mammaries? Do you like to have them slowly revealed to you in a mid-priced tease show? If you answered yes, this "sexy" revue will foot the bill. It's actualy one of the better boobie shows on the Strip, but the seating is strange because it's a converted movie theater and steeper than a normal live venue.
LAX: Wow. Another ultra lounge. How clever. This one is an imitation of the hot LA club and has all the requisite things to make you feel small if you can't get in, and tall if you spend enough to slip past the velvet rope. Overpriced drinks and low booths are the features.
Liquidity: This huge, sprawling bar area dominates the casino floor and is annoyingly trendy. Actually, it's annoying because it's trying to so hard to be trendy, but is actually just like every other bar all gussied up just to make you pay more for a drink.
Menopause the Musical: This one is strictly for the ladies. It's a comedy-musical about women growing older, so we really don't recommend it for the men unless going with their wives is the only way to stop WWIII, or they just love jokes about hot flashes and sagging skin.
Traveling Exhibits: The Luxor hosts traveling exhibits for long periods of time. These are shows typically hosted by museums, such as "Bodies" or Titanic artifacts.


Number of TVs: Twenty plasma TVs plus five big screens are spread out for sports and racing.
Number of Seats: One-hundred-ten average chairs, all of which have individual TVs, but they are old CRTs that take up most of the table.
How Many Betting Windows? About eight for race and sports.
Free Drinks? They aren't fast about it, but they do serve free drinks to people who wager and ask for drink chits.
Snack Bar? Nope.
Minimum Wager: $10 straight, $10 futures in sports. $2 race.
Other Notes: This is just a decent book, worth checking out if you're staying here or at the Excalibur, but definitely not a destination. It is often not crowded.


Number of Tables: Eight tables.
Comfort of Chairs: Pretty average, actually. At least our butts didn't complain.
Closed Room or Open to Casino? Open but isolated, so it stays pretty quiet except for noise from the adjacent sports book. If you like silence, hope nobody scores a touchdown. It's non-smoking and far enough from smoke to be okay.
Game Spreads and Limits: Hold-em $2-$4 and up, a $1-$2 no-limit game with $40-$200 buy-in. Maybe, occasionally, a higher price no-limit games.
Beginner Games or Classes? Classes offered every day in the afternoon.
How Crowded is the Room? Not too busy. Probably you'll wait a bit for a table on weekends, but for the most part the action has migrated to either of the places next door.
Comps? Free drinks while playing. Comps are $5 for four hours of play. Poker room rate for rooms after five hours.
How Good Are the Players? Average to below average. A pretty safe place to play on the Strip for beginners. In face, we would classify this room as a beginner joint.
What Else Do I Need to Know? This is the Bruce Buffer poker room. What does that mean? Not a lot, other than the guy who coined the phrase "Let's get ready to rumble" has attached his name to the room. There are frequent no-limit tournaments.


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